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Think!

Think!
Manufacturer: Pocket Books
Category: EBooks

List Price: $11.99
Buy New: $9.59
You Save: $2.40 (20%)



Avg. Customer Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars 68 reviews
Sales Rank: 10302

Format: Kindle Book
Media: Kindle Edition
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 368

Dewey Decimal Number: 153.420973
ASIN: B000NY11SS

Publication Date: March 2, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Similar Items:

  • Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking
  • The Tipping Point
  • The SPEED of Trust: The One Thing that Changes Everything

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
"This isn't the time to Blink. It's time to THINK! -- before it's too late. Outraged by the downward spiral of American intellect and culture, Michael R. LeGault offers the flip side of Malcolm Gladwell's bestselling phenomenon, Blink, which theorized that our best decision-making is done on impulse, without factual knowledge or critical analysis. If bestselling books are advising us to not think, LeGault argues, it comes as no surprise that sharp, incisive reasoning has become a lost art in the daily life of Americans. Somewhere along the line, the Age of Reason morphed into the Age of Emotion; this systemic erosion is costing time, money, jobs, and lives in the twenty-first century, leading to less fulfillment and growing dysfunction. LeGault provides a bold, controversial, and objective analysis of the causes and solutions for: * the erosion of growth and market share at many established American companies, big and small, which appear to have less chance of achieving the dynamic expansion of the past * permissive parenting and low standards that have caused an academic crisis among our children -- body weights rise while grades plummet * America's growing political polarization, which is a result of our reluctance to think outside our comfort zone * faulty planning and failure to act on information at all levels that has led to preventable disasters, such as the Hurricane Katrina meltdown * a culture of image and instant gratification, fed by reality shows and computer games, that has rendered curiosity of the mind and spirit all but obsolete * stress, aversion to taking risks, and therapy that are replacing the traditional American ""can do"" mind-set. Far from perpetuating the stereotype of the complacent American, LeGault's no-holds-barred analysis asks more of us than any other societal overview: America can fulfill its greatest potential starting today, and we need smart teachers, smart health care workers, smart sales representatives, smart students, smart mechanics, and smart leaders to make it happen. Now is the time to THINK! -- because a mind truly is a terrible thing to waste. "


Customer Reviews:   Read 63 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Should be read once a year   September 17, 2008
After reading this book, I can no longer watch television without feeling guilty for wasting my time. The author showed me many holes in my college education. He writes to the lay people and the college student.
In fact, I would call this an invitation to graduate school.
If you read this from cover to cover, you will watch less of the idiot box and spend less time on the computer. He ruined television for me. Nice going.......



1 out of 5 stars No critical thinking in Think!   August 3, 2008
This book purports to explain why we need to depend more on critical thinking and analysis, but tries to do so without using any critical thinking. Most of LeGault's arguments are unsupported by any kind of evidence except for anecdotes. The author does his best to disprove his thesis with his own writing. Unbelievable!


2 out of 5 stars It could have been a good book...   May 29, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

The right person could have taken this theme and written a really valuable and useful book. Legault's attempt is a poorly organized mish-mash tainted by his own biases. Someone on the political left could have written a book with the same flaws and with mirror image biases and blind spots. And it would have been just as bad.

Legault makes the case for critical thinking and this is good, but then he shows himself to be blinded by his ideology.



4 out of 5 stars Enhance creativity and improve reasoning   March 24, 2008
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

"We have become a society in which the first instinct is not to think clearly, it is the protection of one's backside "(pg 29) The book explores why the use of reason is declining and the ones to blame for this.
Despite Blink being a best-seller, and having great reviews, I was never persuaded to read it. However, Think! caught my attention and I am pleased to have read it. I can't comment on the comparisons Le Gault makes to Blink, but I recommend this book to those who have and have not read Blink. Le Gault is a master of words and a clever thinker. The majority of his arguments are valid and the ones you may disagree with just open the door to insightful thinking. This book will make you feel guilty about watching TV and engaging in non-intellectual activities or "passive entertainment" as he calls it but nonetheless it will encourage you to become a critical thinker. Le Gault is definitely a conservative and expresses his right-wing views throughout the book but after all, aren't challenging views necessary to become critical thinkers?
"It is not luxury, or corruption, or invasion per se that ultimately threatens and weakens a society, but moral decline, spiritual decline, ennui, or some sort of intellectual lethargy". (pg321)



5 out of 5 stars Think Before You Blink   December 6, 2007
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

In light of the present housing crisis and pending recession, this book could not have been written at a better time. Obviously upset at the flawed, subjectivist logic of Malcolm Gladwell, Michael LeGault has responded in kind with this well-written book.

Essentially, LeGault believes that the reason why people in the West are in trouble is due to their inability to or unwillingness to think their actions through before deciding on their course of action.

A prime example of people not thinking their actions through until its too late is the housing slump and pending recession. If people had taken the time to think and use logic before signing on to the mortgages with which many are now in default, the so-called housing crisis and recession we are seeing would have never happened. Now, as a result of illogical behavior, the taxpayers may soon be looted to bail these people out or the lenders will be forced to freeze their actions on people in default of their mortgages.

What many people need to start doing is re-learning how to think and stop conducting themselves in a subjectivist, touchy-feely manner. Unfortunately, many times it takes things to get bad before people realize the mistakes they make. This methodology needs to change and I believe it can and will since people mostly learn from their mistakes.

This is not to say people should never take risks or that feelings are irrelevant. However, an objective, consistent, logical and well-thought out course of action is needed before taking major decisions in one's life. Logic grounded in subjectivism, which is what Gladwell advocates, is nice on paper but is lousy in practice.


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